GY교문사

Prescott's Microbiology 12/e

Prescott's Microbiology 12/e
저자
Joanne Willey, Kathleen Sandman, Dorothy Wood
출간
2022-03-01
ISBN
9781265123031
형태
국배판변형 · 4도 · 무선철 · 912쪽
가격
59,000 원

책 소개

The author team of Prescott’s Microbiology continues to provide a modern approach to microbiology using evolution as a framework. This new 12th edition integrates impactful new changes to include a fresh new design to engage students and important content updates including SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 which are prominently featured taxonomic schemes that have been extensively revised recent epidemiological data and mRNA vaccines which just scrapes the surface of this new edition.

목차

Part One Introduction to Microbiology

Chapter: 1. The Evolution of Microorganisms and Microbiology

Chapter: 2. Microscopy

Chapter: 3. Bacterial Cell Structure

Chapter: 4. Archaeal Cell Structure

Chapter: 5. Eukaryotic Cell Structure

Chapter: 6. Viruses and Other Acellular Infectious Agents

 

Part Two Microbial Nutrition, Growth, and Control

Chapter: 7. Bacterial and Archaeal Growth

Chapter: 8. Control of Microorganisms in the Environment

Chapter: 9. Antimicrobial Chemotherapy

 

Part Three Microbial Metabolism

Chapter: 10. Introduction to Metabolism

Chapter: 11. Catabolism: Energy Release and Conservation

Chapter: 12. Anabolism: The Use of Energy in Biosynthesis

 

Part Four Microbial Molecular Biology and Genetics

Chapter: 13. Bacterial Genome Replication and Expression

Chapter: 14. Regulation of Cellular Processes

Chapter: 15. Eukaryotic and Archaeal Genome Replication and Expression

Chapter: 16. Mechanisms of Genetic Variation

Chapter: 17. Microbial DNA Technologies

Chapter: 18. Microbial Genomics

 

Part Five The Diversity of the Microbial World

Chapter: 19. Archaea

Chapter: 20. Nonproteobacterial Gram-Negative Bacteria

Chapter: 21. Proteobacteria

Chapter: 22. Gram-Positive Bacteria

Chapter: 23. Protists

Chapter: 24. Fungi

Chapter: 25. Viruses

 

Part Six Ecology and Symbiosis

Chapter: 26. Exploring Microbes in Ecosystems

Chapter: 27. Microbial Interactions

Chapter: 28. Biogeochemical Cycling and Global Climate Change

Chapter: 29. Microorganisms in Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems

Chapter: 30. Microorganisms in Terrestrial Ecosystems

 

Part Seven Pathogenicity and Host Response

Chapter: 31. Innate Host Resistance

Chapter: 32. Adaptive Immunity

Chapter: 33. The Microbe-Human Ecosystem

Chapter: 34. Infection and Pathogenicity

Part Eight Microbial Diseases, Detection, and Their Control

Chapter: 35. Epidemiology and Public Health Microbiology

Chapter: 36. Clinical Microbiology and Immunology

Chapter: 37. Human Diseases Caused by Viruses and Prions

Chapter: 38. Human Diseases Caused by Bacteria

Chapter: 39. Human Diseases Caused by Fungi and Protists

 

Part Nine Applied Microbiology

Chapter: 40. Microbiology of Food

Chapter: 41. Biotechnology and Industrial Microbiology

Chapter: 42. Applied Environmental Microbiology

 

Appendix 1 A Review of the Chemistry of Biological Molecules

Appendix 2 Common Metabolic Pathways

Appendix 3 Microorganism Pronunciation Guide

저자 소개

Joanne Willey

 

Joanne M. Willey has been a professor at Hofstra University on Long Island, New York, since 1993, where she is the Leo A. Guthart Professor of Biomedical Science and Chair of the Department of Science Education at the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell.

 

 

Dr. Willey received her B.A. in Biology from the University of Pennsylvania, where her interest in microbiology began with work on cyanobacterial growth in eutrophic streams. She earned her Ph.D. in biological oceanography (specializing

in marine microbiology) from the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution Joint Program in 1987. She then went to Harvard University, where she spent her postdoctoral fellowship studying the filamentous soil bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor. Dr. Willey has coauthored a number of publications that focus on its complex developmental cycle. She is an active member of the American Society for Microbiology (ASM), and served on the editorial board of the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology for nine years and as Chair of the Division of General Microbiology. Dr. Willey taught microbiology to biology majors for 20 years and now teaches microbiology and infectious disease to medical students. She has taught courses in cell biology, marine microbiology, and laboratory techniques in molecular genetics.

 

Dr. Willey lives on the north shore of Long Island and has two grown sons. She is an avid runner and enjoys skiing, hiking, sailing, and reading. She can be reached at joanne.m.willey@ hofstra.edu.

 

 

 

Kathleen Sandman

 

Kathleen M. Sandman received her B.A. in Biology from La Salle University and her Ph.D. in Cellular and Developmental Biology from Harvard University. She was inspired to a career in science by her older brother’s experience as an organic chemist and by the developing technology in recombinant DNA in the 1970s. Her graduate work used a transposable element as a mutagen in Bacillus subtilis to study gene expression during endospore formation. She continued in the genetics of Gram-positive bacteria with a postdoctoral year studying Bacillus thuringiensis at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. Another postdoctoral opportunity at The Ohio State University provided an introduction to the emerging field of archaeal molecular biology, where Dr. Sandman discovered archaeal histones and continued research in the structural biology of archaeal chromatin for about 20 years. She served the National Science Foundation as a research grant reviewer and panelist for the Life in Extreme Environments program, and has organized conference sessions on archaeal molecular biology and proteins from extremophiles. Dr. Sandman has taught microbiology to hundreds of students, at both the introductory level and in an advanced molecular microbiology laboratory.

 

Dr. Sandman has worked as a consultant in a variety of industries, including industrial microbiology, environmental geomicrobiology, and technical publishing. She lives with her husband in Columbus, Ohio, and has two grown daughters. She enjoys biking, fabric arts, reading, and genealogy, and can be reached at kathleenmsandman@gmail.com.

 

 

 

Dorothy Wood

 

Dorothy H. Wood has taught microbiology and general biology at Durham Technical Community College in North Carolina since 2004. Dr. Wood received her B.A. in Biology from Rhode Island College where her love of microbes

began, nurtured by Dr. Charles Owens. She earned her Ph.D. in Cell and Molecular Pathology from the University

of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, focusing on pancreatic damage caused by antimicrobial drugs, and investigated alternative therapies based on receptor binding by novel compounds. After three years as Assistant Professor at NC Central University, Dr. Wood made the move to the NC Community College System to focus her attention on her primary interest of teaching. Throughout her career she has developed several courses, including graduate bacteriology, pathophysiology, and biotechnology. She serves as a visiting scholar at Duke University where she is a mentor for the Preparing Future Faculty program. Dr. Wood is a member of the American Society for Microbiology and the Association of College and University Biology Educators, as well as several local organizations that foster pedagogy. She is a digital faculty consultant for McGrawHill and has worked on several textbooks in a variety of disciplines, developing and editing digital content to accompany the texts. Outside of the classroom, Dr. Wood is a fitness professional, leads health and wellness seminars, and has been the treasurer of a nonprofit organization for the past 10 years. She enjoys life in North Carolina with her husband and two grown children and can be reached at woodd@durhamtech.edu.

역자 소개